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About The news=record. (Enterprise, Wallowa County, Or.) 1907-1910 | View Entire Issue (Sept. 21, 1907)
Is Pe-ru-na Useful for Catarrh? Should a list of the ingredients of Pe ranabe submitted to any medical ex pert, of whatever school or nationality, he would be obliged to admit without reserve that each one of them was of un doubted value in chronio catarrhal dis eases, and had stood the test of many years' experience in the treatment oi such diseases. THERE CAN BE NO DISPUTE ABOUT THIS WHAT EVER, Peruna is composed of the most efficacious and universally used herbal remedies for catarrh. Every ingredient of Peruna has a reputation of its own in the cure of some phase of catarrh. Peruna brings to the home the COM BINED KNOWLEDGE OP SEVERAL SCHOOLS OP MEDICINE in the treat ment of catarrhal diseases; brings to the home the scientific skill and knowl edgeof the modern pharmacist; andlast but not least,brings to the home the vast and varied experience of Dr. Hartman, in the use o f catarrh remedies, and in the treatment of catarrhal diseases. The fact is, chronio catarrh is a dis ease which is very prevalent. Many thousand people know they have chronio catarrh. They have visited doctors over and over again, and been told that their case is one of chronic catarrh. It may be of the nose, throat, lungs, stomach or some other internal organ. There is no doubt as to the na- jure oi me (usease. -me only trouble xcmoujr. xiiuuocwrnasineato cure them. That doctor has tried to prescribe for them. BUT THEY ALL FAILED TO BEING ANY BELIEF. Dr. Hartman's idea is that a catarrh remedy can be made on a large scale, as he is making it; that it can be made honestly, of the purest drugs and oi the strictest uniformity. His idea ic that this remedy can be supplied direct ly to the people, and no more be charged for it than is necessary for the handling of it. No other household remedy so uni versally advertised carries upon the label the principal active constituents showing that Peruna invites the full inspection of the critics. Confidential. Husband But, my dear. If Mrs. Nextdoor told you In strict confidence you shouldn't tell me. Wife Oh, very well; if you don't care to hear It I can tell it to some body else, I suppose. Chicago News. After the Floods. "I hear that you bought a home . In the suburbs, Harker?" interrogated the city friend. "Yes," sighed Harker, as he took a firmer grip on the lawn mower and basket of seeds. "And I also heard that it Is right - up to date. Why, they say It even has subcellars." . "No, submarine cellars. They are under water most of the time." Modified. "One-half the world," .remarked the man with the quotation habit, "doesn't know how the other half lives." ' "And it may also be stated without puncturing the truth," rejoined the wise guy, "that three-fourths of It doesn't know how it lives Itself." ;AB B1LOOB THE SOURCE OFiUX DISEASE Every part of the body is dependent on the blood for nourishment and Strength. When this life stream i3 flowing through the system in a state of purity and richness we are assured of perfect and uninterrupted health Lecause pure blood i3 nature's safe-guard against disease. When, however jj, a. wca., impure pouuiea Diooa, tne system is deprived of 1 DV looking through the hole with one its strength, disease germs collect, and the trouble is manifested in various y toward the edge of the elevated ob tvavs. Pustular eruotions. tiimnlM T.T;lipa onrl ti;fTo-t-,t.: r u . . snow tnat the blood is in a feverish and diseased condition as a result of too much acid or the presence of some irritating humor. Sores and Ulcers are the result of morbid, unhealthy matter in the blood, and Rheumatism Ca tarrh, Scrofula, Contagious Blood Poison, etc., are all deep-seated blood disorders that will continue to grow worse as long as the poison remains. These impurities and poisons find their way into the blood in various ways Often n Rlnp-frisli innrtivemnitirxi if ! j ;ji i i r. avenues of bodily waste, form nr e and other acids, whirl, or- t,l- throughout the circulation. Coming another cause for the poisoning of the microbes of Malaria, into imr lnnrro --- ti gtL UiU tile VIOOQ in I Sufficient quantity it becomes a carrier of disease instead of health. Some are so unfortunate aS to inherit bad blood, perhaps the dregs of some old ' constitutional disease of ancestors i3 handed down to them and Ihev are I constantly annoyed and troubled with it Bad blood is the source of all dis ease, and until this vital fluid is cleansed and purified the body is sure to Buffer in some way. For blood troubles of any character S. S. S. is the best remedy ever discovered. It goes down into the circulation and removes any and all poisons, supplies the healthful properties it needs, and completely PURELY VEGETABLE . . cut uvea uui leave LUC slightest trace of the trouble for future outbreaks. The whole volume of blood is renewed and cleansed after a course of S. S. S. It is also nature's greatest tonic, made entirely of roots, herbs and barks, and is absolutely harmless to any part of the system. S. S. S. is for sale at all first class rug Stores. Book on the blood and any medical advice free to all who write. JUE 3WOT 8PCCU1C CO ATIAKTA. CA ad Mistake of an Actor. An actor without fund managed tn some way to get a second-class ticket on a line of steamers running between Seattle and San Francisco. The voy age between these two points consumed the better part of three days and In view of the fact that his finances were at low ebb he solved the question In this way : The first day out he slept all day to keep from eating, and remained up all night to keep from sleeping. The sec ond day he took physical culture exer cises. On the third day he could not stand the strain any longer and went down 1n the dining room and ordered the best meal on board the boat. While eating this meal be could see In his mind's eye a picture of a cell in the bastlle in San Francisco. After finishing his meal he said to the wait er: "How much do I owe you?" "Nothing," replied the waiter, "your meals were included In your t'.ckst." Good Fellow. "George, dear," said youne Mrs. Mar- ryat, "I got a recipe for a fruit cake to-aay that will keep for a year." "Oh," replied the husband, "you ought to keep It longer than that." "What? Keep fruit cake longer " "No, the recipe. Mislay It some where." Philadelphia Press. Branded aa a Deaerter. An army pension has Just been granted to J. Tomlln, of Nottingham, England, who is now 81; and his med als, granted for Sevastopol, have been replaced. It seems that he was invalided home from the Crimea and granted a month's luriough. While enjoying bis rest he was stricken with typhoid fever, but being unable to rad or write, did not acquaint the officers of his regiment with his misfortune or ask a friend to do so. The consequence was that when nis ruriougu expired he was posted as a deserter, and while on his way to re join was arrested At Aldershot he was tried by court martial and sentenced to be branded with the letter "D." No Chance at All. "That Martel Is really a terrible bore. He talked last night for hours and only stopped' to cough." "Well, I suppose you could get a word In edgeways then?" "Rather not, for while he was cough ing he, made signs with his hands that he was going on afterwards." Nos Lolslrs. Time to Move. ' "They're cuttine out an awful lot of good songs these days," said Mr. Stay late. "Yes?" queried Miss Patience Gone, with a yawn. "Yes j there's a new march song that's great. It's fine to march to " "Indeed! I wish I had It. I'd nlnT It for you. Philadelphia Press. Her Perch. "Did he propose to her on hi knees?" "No, but she accepted him on tham " Houston Post Civic Pride. "My town," said the first traveler "is Greater New York." "Glad to know you," cried the othpr "I'm from Chicago, too." "I say my town la Greater New York." "O ! I thought you said greater than New York." Catholic Standard and Times. ' vi j j j-.f T , I ia contact with contagious diseases is i blood ; we also breathe the germs and I nnA -.. n. i . iimoircnuy cuica ciood diseases oi every kind. The action of S. S. S. is so thorough that hereditary taints are removed and weak, diseased blood made strong and healthy so that disease cannot remain. It cures Rheumatism, Catarrh, Scrofula, Sores and Ulcers, Skin Diseases, Contagious IS THERE INSANITY P Abaolate Sanity Declared by Expert Not to Exist. Anglo-Saxons are so prone to take common-sense views of things that they seldom realize the full force of the fa miliar saying that all men have some form of madness In them, says Current Literature. The second inference Is, as is pointed out by Dr. G. II. Savage, the eminent English 'alienist, in a recent Lancet paper; that perfect sanity would be not only undesirable In Itself, t-.t from a strictly scientific point of view impossible. For a perfectly sane per sonwere such a thing thinkable would be dull and uninteresting a mediocrity, a nonentity. The polut to seize, however, as Dr. Savage Im presses upon us, Is that there can be no comprehensive Idea or definition of in sanity, because the thing does not really exist No scientist can set up any standard of rationality departure from which would comprise or dnuota insanity. One can diagnose a case of typhoid because It is a continued fe ver characterized by a peculiar course of the temperature, by marked abdom inal symptoms, by an eruption upon the skin. But there Is nothlne In whnt goes by the name of insanity to further a diagnosis as that term Is understood by medical men generally. Some treatises upon Insanity prove nothing at all by proving too much, for they make whole nations insane at once. Fhysl clans connected w'th Insanity, as Dr Savage argues, resemble gardeners rather than botanists. "We classify for convenience rather than nnon n scientific basis, because, in point of fact no such basis or finality of mode has as yet been discovered." Perhaps, adds Dr. Savage, there Is no need to wonder at this, since many have to be treated as lunatics whose brains and nervous systems show no change whatever from the normal course of what Is recognized as sanltv. Unfortunately, the Impulse to define and classify sometimes leads to misin terpretation of a deploruble kind. Such. for example. Is the false view, as Dr. Savage deems It, that every person of unsound mind Is a lunatic. That, he says, to a "pseudo-legal" absurdity. "Obviously there are many persons of unsound mind who are neither danger ous to themselves nor to others whv. therefore, regard them as aliens?" The true difficulty, Insists this distinguished expert, is that the disease Insanity does not exist Yet one might almost con clude from the elaborate articles In our leading daily Journals that such a thing as insanity is a definitely established scientific fact, that It Is a malady as definite In its symptoms nnd origin as, say, cancer or tuberculosis. ASTRONOMY FOB LANDSMEN. How a Watch or Clock Slay Be Rear- nlated by Observing; a Star. When some investigator makes the "discovery" that the points of the ooin- pass can be approximately determined by looking at the sun and using a watch to show the divisions of the plane it is apt to go the rounds of the press as something very peculiar. If this discoverer were sufficiently con versant with the principles of naviga tion to note for the public benefit that the running of a watch or clock may be regulated by observing a star he might confer some practical benefit. This is a very simple thing to do and might be of great use In a country place where accurate time is not al ways obtainable, but all that Is neces sary Is a fixed location on the earth's surface and any old thing In the way of a timepiece. Choose a south window from which any other fixed point comparatively near and high, such as a chimney, side of a building, etc., may be seen. To the side of a window fasten a piece of card having a small hole in It, so that ject some fixed star may be seen. Watch the progress of the star, and the Instant it vanishes behind the fix ed point the observer must note the ex act time Is disappears. Watch the same star the following night, and It will vanish behind the same object Just three minutes and flfty-sij sec- -f nd sooner. If the timepiece marks 9.T?k Wben tbe mr "'""PI0" one Indicate three minutes and fifty-six seconds less than 0 the ,, , rolIowIn night If several cloudy n,g'jt8 occur together, follow the first observatlon and deduct the product from clock time to find the time the tar will pass. Marine Journal. Tbe Climax. Wireless telegraphy and horseless car riage fine, Are a novel pair of wonder that perplex ' us. But there's a new Invention stranger yet and more benign W're referring to tbe gunleaa State of Texas. Philadelphia Ledger. Small Vlrea. "Hare you noticed that bis automo bile emits a rapid succession of explo sive ''choos? " Tea. and It smokes aa well 'choos.'" Cleveland rialn Dealer. IJIfTI Cutting I suppose it did make you reel mean. Dublis Well, I should say 1 Why, I 'elt like a plugged nickel. J Cutting Ah! but what a blessing it (ls that we never feel quite as bad as fve look. Philadelphia Press. Too Informal. Johnny The doctor nays Uncle Hum phrey has Bright's disease. His Mamma The doctor may call it that if he pleases, my dear, but you tuuiu say .ir. unirnf rtjtose. Mothers will find Mri. Winslow'o Soothing jyrup the b. st remedy to use for their children luring the teethlug period. Not a Circumstance. "Didn't the thunder storm disturb you last night?" ' "Thunder storm? I didn't know there was one." "You didn't? Where on earth do you sleep?" "Nowhere on earth. I sleep within three feet of an elevated railway track." Reaaon for Suppression. "The Mikado' was suppressed In London out of deference to the feelings of the Japanese; wasn't that silly?" "Oh, I dn't know; perhaps a bunch of amateurs were playing it" Houston Post FITS St. Vitus' fiance una all Nervons Diseases permanently cured by Dr. Kline's Ureal erve KPBioror. Henri for FHKK 12 trial hnttle And treatlae. Dr. K. H.KllnB,LU.,8ai Arcb BU,PhUa.,Pa. A Bond of Sympathy, . While the new maid tidied the room the busy woman kept on writing. "Do you make that all out of your own head?" asked Jane. "Yes," said the busy woman. "My," said Jane admiringly, "you must have brains!" "Brains!" sighed the woman de spondently. "Oh, Jane, I haven't an ounce of brains." For a moment Jane regarded her with sincere commiseration. "Oh, well," she said presently, "don't mind what I say. I ain't very smart myself." New York Press. J net a Complaint. "Your complaint, madam," saia 0,j Dr. Gruffly, "Is very serious " "There now!" triumphantly cried the fussy woman, "I knew It " "Yes, madam, your complaint Is chronic and there isn't the slightest aliment to excuse it" Philadelphia Press. Tired of Fiction. Married Man I want to get a book for my wife. Clerk Something In the way of fic tion? "No; I've given her lots of that, but she doesn't seem to care for it I" Yon kers Statesman. CASTOR I A For Infants and Children. The Kind You Have Always Bought Signature of 6tffi&&U Tvro Klnda. "Political succpps," remarked one statesman, "depends a great deal on your platform." "Yes," answered the other; "the par ty plotfonn of artistic success and the lecture platform for financial success." Washington Star. Helleved. rhyRldan Your boy will pull throiiRh all right. He has a wonderful consti tution. Mr. Tyte-PhiRt I am glad to hear It, doctor. In making out your bill, of course, you will not make me pny for what lis constitution has donn in nullini? him through. Invention Worth Money. "Have you invented anything recent ly?" "Yes," answered the sensational scientist. "I have Invented a new wnv to get to the north pole." "Is It good for anything?" "Certainly. It Is cood for tin nn In a mniruzlnp." Washington Star. Do you pin your hat to your own hair? Can't do it? Haven't enough hair? It must be you do not know Ayer's Hair Vigor I Here's an intro duction! May the acquaint ance result in a heavy growth of rich, thick, glossy hair! And we know you'll never be gray. I think that Ayer't n1r Vliror U the mnt wonderful halrgruwer ttut wu. arer marie. 1 have nsed It for tome time nnd I can truth fully av that I am greatly pleated with It. 1 cheerfully reromnn-nd It ai ft eplendld prepa ration." MlRS V. Bbock, Wayland, Mich, tT J.O. Ay fir Co.. Lowell, Alo mauftoturra of 8AR8APAEILU. PILLS. CtlEaRV PECTORAL. DBBCBaBWaBBaaaaaaHaaaaaaaBBaaBBr Is It Your OwnHair? ijers Sanking by ftlail WE PAY INTEREST On ravings deposits of a dollar or more, compounded twice every year. It is just as easy to open a Savings Account with us by Mail as it you lived next door. Send for our free book let, "Banking by Mail," and learn full particulars. Address Oregon Trust 8c Savings Bank Portland, Oregon Sixth and Washington Sts. A London eiivu k-i.iu hits established the "wireless" in liis house and summons his servant to lii nriwenep by means of it. HOWAUD E. ntTRTON. Assayer art Chemlurf lieadvllle, Colorado. Kpftruiitn prU'en: 4ulil. Silver, L-ad.f 1 1 Unlu, HIlvur.T; Uofd.fcw: Zlnoor C'opHr,l. Cyiinulo tfota. Mtilllntfenvelnpt anil full price list uent on amiltcntinn. Control and Urn- Ire work eollclluU. Ifelereucet Carbonate Na. oual IJank. h Cheap as Can Be Bought In the East Delivery Much Quicker Write Us Today BRING YOUR TOOTH TROUBLES TO US Before Going Elaewhere. DR. B. E. WRIGHT. 342'? Washington St. Portland, Oregon ENGRAVING Write Us PLATES FOR PRINTING HICKS-CH ATTEN Portland Oregon Oaiollna Enffineii udlrri Mtlon Plant WaUrloo Wall Drills Built eiHHn1ly For wnrli tn tho imrtliwoHt. Drill. Iriff nnd titthin tool, yincmrrya ii.rj eMook. n ritti (mull your mitchii. Prywiinln. W.tll -In Hurt oonlrmit lilauka f r" REIERBON MACHINERY Slsoo St., fortlua, Or. TBE DAIRY FLY KILLEft flftKtroyii nil the flu nml utTnrd r m fort tovy lioruo in dining r'MHII, Hl(Oplll( room nml ovcry JlllK H Wlll'II t)lt nnti rniihlimuift. (Mean, neot anil will not smiII or - ., . ... iiij.iniunyl liln, 77 thorn onco and you will nnvi-r lm without tuoia. " I' M iiiiTin, ri-in. i')ltl TOT JKJ. UPHOLD fiOMEEfl, 149 DEalb Av Brooklyn, K. Y. ST. HELEN'S HALL POkTlAND, OREGON A Girls' Pi'hool of the hlxlient Husk. CciIIokI ale ilci.artmciil. Mimic. Art. Klni iuinii Him. nahlum. Fall tvnn opeita Hcjieniljer 10. SEND TOR CATALOGUE OUSnJESSCOLLEG TENTH AND MORRISON STREETS PORTLAND, OREOON A. a. ARMSTRONG, IX. B PRINCIPAL Quality is our motto. We educate for eucceaa. and send each atudent to a position when com. petent many more calls for help than we can moot Individual Instruction insures rapid Droit- resa. All modern methods of bookkeeping are tauifht; also rapid calculations, correspondence, commercial law, office work, etc. Chart ier la our shorthand easy, rapid, legible. DeautifuJ catalogue, business forms and penmanship froo. C L A SSI FIE D ADS KOTICK The following announcements ar Horn leading bundles men ami firms, and aro oil worthy your careful reading. The list piay contain Ju.l the proponitlou you aro loo, lug tor. REAL ESTATE EAST CREENACRES The only tracts on the market where yon ran contract to sell your crop. Ten trains a day. Abundance of waier. Price tlWou per acre--easy paymenU-coue In or write for particu- BEECHKR A THOMPSON Bpokan. Washington, 110 8terin r. n. u. N. 31-or TV,,,!,f writing; to advertisers PPlllil riTaaTj v V neniioat ti this paper. f